From: RvL <rv...@tt...> - 2003-10-29 12:05:27
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Thanks, this was indeed the solution for this problem. Keir Fraser wrote: >>>my uneducated guess was that it was a problem with swap devices. >>>my old setup was domain0 /dev/hda2 as a swap device, >>>domain1 no swap device, but i tried domain1 /swapfile (150) mb file >>>created with dd if=/dev/zero of=/swapfile, and mkswap /swapfile, >>>sync, sync , swapon /swapfile .... but that didn't work either. >>> >>> >>Have you granted domain 1 *write* access to hda5? To do this you pass >>the '-w' flag to 'xenctl physical grant'. >> >>I'd hope that Linux would compain loudly if you tried to mount a >>read-write filesystem from a volume which it can't write to. However, >>I won't be surprised if we haven't got that quite right --- I'd be >>interested to know if this is the problem! >> >> > >Okay, I'm now certain that this is your problem. Grant domain 1 access >using the -w flag and the file will not disappear! > >Also, the latest check-in contains a fix to Xenolinux so that you >cannot mount a read-only partition for read-write access. Much saner >:-) > >Oh yeah: this is now the latest-semistable release. Please beat up on >it and let us know of any weirdnesses. It's probably a good idea for >us to push out a proper 1.1 release before starting our next batch of >big hacks! > > -- Keir > > >------------------------------------------------------- >This SF.net email is sponsored by: SF.net Giveback Program. >Does SourceForge.net help you be more productive? Does it >help you create better code? SHARE THE LOVE, and help us help >YOU! Click Here: http://sourceforge.net/donate/ >_______________________________________________ >Xen-devel mailing list >Xen...@li... >https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/xen-devel > > |